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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 11

Peter Doig

Schätzpreis
500.000 £ - 700.000 £
ca. 639.072 $ - 894.701 $
Zuschlagspreis:
1.157.000 £
ca. 1.478.813 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 11

Peter Doig

Schätzpreis
500.000 £ - 700.000 £
ca. 639.072 $ - 894.701 $
Zuschlagspreis:
1.157.000 £
ca. 1.478.813 $
Beschreibung:

◆ 11 Peter Doig Follow Tunnel Painting (Country-rock) signed, titled and dated ‘Peter Doig “Tunnel Painting (Country-rock)” 2000’ on the reverse oil on canvas 40.5 x 30.5 cm (15 7/8 x 12 in.) Painted in 2000.
Provenance Barbara Mathes Gallery, New York Galleria Raucci/Santamaria, Naples Phillips de Pury & Company, New York, 12 May 2006, lot 202 Private Collection Sotheby's, London, 29 June 2010, lot 245 Acquired at the above sale by the present owner Catalogue Essay A reverie of pure nostalgia, Peter Doig’s Tunnel Painting (Country-rock) , painted in 2000, is a dream-like soliloquy; a phantasmal scene of iridescent pigment against the ethereal layers rendered in grey and green. Characteristic of Doig’s painterly output, the present work recalls his years spent in Canada, manifested in a series of paintings based on the Don Valley Parkway, a tunnel built in 1961 on the eastern perimeter of the northbound highway in Toronto. Now the main highway in and out of the city, the famous rainbow tunnel, painted as a memorial by Berg Johnson at the tender age of 16, is now officially sanctioned as public art some 30 years on. Between 1998 and 2000, Doig painted three monumental works centred on the Don Valley rainbow, one of which is presently in the collection of the Pinchuk Art Centre in Kiev whilst another was chosen as the lead illustration for the artist’s seminal retrospective at the Tate Britain in 2008. Despite only featuring in three major canvasses, Doig made a number of paintings, drawings, watercolours and aquatints that retell this unique experience, the mysterious view from the car seen by millions of commuters over several decades. The deep blackness of the tunnel’s centre is enigmatic, at once suggestive of an entrance to another realm whilst also depicting an anonymous marginal urban space. As Doig has commented, ’a lot of the works deal with peripheral or marginal sites, places where the urban world meets the natural world. Where the urban elements almost become, literally, abstract devices. There are a lot of ‘voids’ in the paintings. A lot of the paintings portray a sense of optimism that can often be read as being a little desperate, like the image of a rainbow painted around the entrance to an underpass.’ (Peter Doig in Adrian Searle Kitty Scott and Catherine Grenier, Peter Doig , London, 2007, p. 139). The mastery of Doig’s painterly technique carries the quality of memory. Layering thinned oil paint, the artist gradually works light, space and sentiment into his compositions. Commenting on his painterly technique Doig notes that painting for him ‘is very much about the material…I react to what happens during the making of a painting. This is what determines when a painting is finished for me. I have no ultimate plan, really. I want to be surprised. I would get very bored if I followed a procedure’ (Peter Doig ‘Artist Peter Doig on how he paints’ in The Guardian , 20 September 2009, online). Harnessing pointillist traits, impressionist qualities and illustrative techniques, the artist creates powerful watercolour effects through the medium of oil. Yearning, reminiscing and romanticising, Tunnel Painting (Country-rock) captures the mundane in a celestial and otherworldly light, disorientating the viewer with a metaphorical proposal of memory and fantasy. However, Doig has noted, ‘People have confused my paintings with being just about my own memories. Of course we cannot escape these. But I am more interested in the idea of memory itself’ ( Peter Doig , exh. cat., Tate Britain, London, 2008, p. 21). Doig began painting these geographically specific Canadian locations once he had settled in London in 1989. Identifying with Scotland, Canada, England and Trinidad, Doig’s residency around the world has been eclectic and distinctly nomadic. Born in Edinburgh, Doig moved to Canada in 1960, residing for 19 years, predominantly in Montreal, Quebec’s Eastern Townships and Toronto. Returning to Britain, he enrolled in three art schools, obtaining an M.A in 1989-90 from the Chelsea School of Art, London. Just four years later, he received an acclaimed Turner Prize nomination. Trinidad has been the artist’s primary residence since

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 11
Auktion:
Datum:
29.06.2017
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
London
Beschreibung:

◆ 11 Peter Doig Follow Tunnel Painting (Country-rock) signed, titled and dated ‘Peter Doig “Tunnel Painting (Country-rock)” 2000’ on the reverse oil on canvas 40.5 x 30.5 cm (15 7/8 x 12 in.) Painted in 2000.
Provenance Barbara Mathes Gallery, New York Galleria Raucci/Santamaria, Naples Phillips de Pury & Company, New York, 12 May 2006, lot 202 Private Collection Sotheby's, London, 29 June 2010, lot 245 Acquired at the above sale by the present owner Catalogue Essay A reverie of pure nostalgia, Peter Doig’s Tunnel Painting (Country-rock) , painted in 2000, is a dream-like soliloquy; a phantasmal scene of iridescent pigment against the ethereal layers rendered in grey and green. Characteristic of Doig’s painterly output, the present work recalls his years spent in Canada, manifested in a series of paintings based on the Don Valley Parkway, a tunnel built in 1961 on the eastern perimeter of the northbound highway in Toronto. Now the main highway in and out of the city, the famous rainbow tunnel, painted as a memorial by Berg Johnson at the tender age of 16, is now officially sanctioned as public art some 30 years on. Between 1998 and 2000, Doig painted three monumental works centred on the Don Valley rainbow, one of which is presently in the collection of the Pinchuk Art Centre in Kiev whilst another was chosen as the lead illustration for the artist’s seminal retrospective at the Tate Britain in 2008. Despite only featuring in three major canvasses, Doig made a number of paintings, drawings, watercolours and aquatints that retell this unique experience, the mysterious view from the car seen by millions of commuters over several decades. The deep blackness of the tunnel’s centre is enigmatic, at once suggestive of an entrance to another realm whilst also depicting an anonymous marginal urban space. As Doig has commented, ’a lot of the works deal with peripheral or marginal sites, places where the urban world meets the natural world. Where the urban elements almost become, literally, abstract devices. There are a lot of ‘voids’ in the paintings. A lot of the paintings portray a sense of optimism that can often be read as being a little desperate, like the image of a rainbow painted around the entrance to an underpass.’ (Peter Doig in Adrian Searle Kitty Scott and Catherine Grenier, Peter Doig , London, 2007, p. 139). The mastery of Doig’s painterly technique carries the quality of memory. Layering thinned oil paint, the artist gradually works light, space and sentiment into his compositions. Commenting on his painterly technique Doig notes that painting for him ‘is very much about the material…I react to what happens during the making of a painting. This is what determines when a painting is finished for me. I have no ultimate plan, really. I want to be surprised. I would get very bored if I followed a procedure’ (Peter Doig ‘Artist Peter Doig on how he paints’ in The Guardian , 20 September 2009, online). Harnessing pointillist traits, impressionist qualities and illustrative techniques, the artist creates powerful watercolour effects through the medium of oil. Yearning, reminiscing and romanticising, Tunnel Painting (Country-rock) captures the mundane in a celestial and otherworldly light, disorientating the viewer with a metaphorical proposal of memory and fantasy. However, Doig has noted, ‘People have confused my paintings with being just about my own memories. Of course we cannot escape these. But I am more interested in the idea of memory itself’ ( Peter Doig , exh. cat., Tate Britain, London, 2008, p. 21). Doig began painting these geographically specific Canadian locations once he had settled in London in 1989. Identifying with Scotland, Canada, England and Trinidad, Doig’s residency around the world has been eclectic and distinctly nomadic. Born in Edinburgh, Doig moved to Canada in 1960, residing for 19 years, predominantly in Montreal, Quebec’s Eastern Townships and Toronto. Returning to Britain, he enrolled in three art schools, obtaining an M.A in 1989-90 from the Chelsea School of Art, London. Just four years later, he received an acclaimed Turner Prize nomination. Trinidad has been the artist’s primary residence since

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 11
Auktion:
Datum:
29.06.2017
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
London
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